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ZIMBABWE:
Tobacco farmers boycott auction
IRIN News
April 06, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46489
JOHANNESBURG - Zimbabwe's
tobacco marketing season failed to take off this week as farmers refused
to sell at the price offered by merchants at the Tobacco Sales Floors
in the capital, Harare.
Buyers offered the farmers a maximum of US $0.45 per kg, down from $3
per kg last year, but farmers are demanding not less than $3 per kg and
have threatened to withhold their crop until fairer prices are obtained.
Of the 1,000 bales brought to auction, only 300 bales had been sold by
the time the boycott started.
This year's tobacco output is estimated at 80 million kg, well below the
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) estimate of 160 million kg.
Farmers have rejected the offered price as uneconomic, arguing that it
did not take into account the high cost of inputs, transport and equipment.
They also fear they might not be able to repay loans extended to tobacco
farmer organisations by the RBZ.
Merchants said they had offered a low price because of the poor quality
of the leaf.
Davison Mugabe, president of the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union (ZCFU),
told IRIN he hoped the pricing dispute would be resolved quickly, and
in favour of the farmers. "We understand the farmers' plight ... something
needs to be done urgently," he said.
Agriculture and Rural Resettlement minister Joseph Made said he did not
want to comment on the auction boycott.
Eddie Cross, an economic analyst and member of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change, said the price wrangle was a sign of deep-seated
problems in the tobacco sector; government had to increase support and
ensure that selling prices were kept at profitable levels to attract more
farmers.
"Any farmer who sells at that price [$0.45 per kg] would be committing
suicide - in business terms," Cross commented. "Farmers alone cannot revive
productivity and viability. They need government support from the growing
stage to the marketing stage, including the creation of conditions to
ensure that prices remain firm and inclined towards farmer viability."
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